RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To investigate polymorphisms of proteasomal genes PSMA6 (rs1048990 and rs2277460), PSMC6 (rs2295826 and rs2295827) and PSMA3 (rs2348071) in Lithuanian patients with asthma. METHODS: One-hundred forty-six asthma patients and 150 control subjects were studied. DNA was extracted from peripheral blood samples. Five single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP's) of the three proteasomal genes were analyzed using allele-specific amplification or the cleaved amplified polymorphic sequence method. RESULTS: While certain alleles and genotypes of PSMA6 rs2277460 and rs1048990 and PSMA3 rs2348071 SNP's occurred more frequently in asthma patients than in controls, no statistically significant differences in alleles or genotypes of PSMA6, PSMC6 or PSMA3 were observed between asthma patients and control subjects. However, when male and female study subjects were considered separately, we found that the CG genotype of PSMA6 rs1048990 is significantly more frequent in male asthma patients compared to male control subjects. CONCLUSIONS: We found no significant differences in frequencies of selected five proteasomal gene PSMA6, PSMC6 and PSMA3 SNP's between asthma patients and control subjects overall. Among male subjects, however, the CG PSMA6 rs1048990 genotype was significantly more frequent in asthma patients compared with control subjects.
Assuntos
Asma/genética , Complexo de Endopeptidases do Proteassoma/genética , Adulto , Alelos , Feminino , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Genótipo , Humanos , Lituânia , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Testes de Função Respiratória , Fatores SexuaisRESUMO
The aim of this study was to ascertain possible associations between childhood obesity, its anthropometric and clinical parameters, and three loci of proteasomal genes rs2277460 (PSMA6 c.-110C>A), rs1048990 (PSMA6 c.-8C>G), and rs2348071 (PSMA3 c. 543+138G>A) implicated in obesity-related diseases. Obese subjects included 94 otherwise healthy children in Latvia. Loci were genotyped and then analyzed using polymerase chain reactions, with results compared to those of 191 nonobese controls. PSMA3 SNP frequency differences between obese children and controls, while not reaching significance, suggested a trend. These differences, however, proved highly significant (P < 0.002) in the subset of children reporting a family history of obesity. Among obese children denying such history, PSMA6 c.-8C>G SNP differences, while being nonsignificant, likewise suggested a trend in comparison to the nonobese controls. No PSMA6 c.-110C>A SNP differences were detected in the obese group or its subsets. Finally, PSMA3 SNP differences were significantly associated (P < 0.05) with circulating low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL) levels. Our results clearly implicate the PSMA3 gene locus as an obesity risk factor in those Latvian children with a family history of obesity. While being speculative, the clinical results are suggestive of altered circulatory LDL levels playing a possible role in the etiology of obesity in the young.